Monday, November 4, 2024

Museum Of Modern Art, 2

 More of the MoMA...

Edward Hopper, Gas, 1940; really starting to like Hopper

Picasso, Charnel House, 1945

Peter Blume, Eternal City, 1937

Magritte, The Lovers, 1928

View of one of the MoMA's cavernous interior spaces

Ecce mulier

James Rosenquist, F-111, 1964...

Obligatory Jack the Dripper

Barnett Newman, Vir Heroicus Sublimis, 1950

Rothko, Untitled No. 1, 1948

Kazuo Shiraga, Untitled, 1964; amazing how far art had come in
just two decades

Matisse, Swimming Pool, 1950s..."his first and only self-contained and site-specific cut-out"

Sam Gilliam, 10/27/69; new material...acrylic

At the bottom of the cavern

Kate Crawford, Vladan Joler, Anatomy of an AI System, 2018; pretty fascinating

Nearby and possibly associated with the above; last time
we saw a life-sized Google pin was outside their headquarters
in Mountain View

Otobong Nkanga, Cadence, visual bit

Mike Kelley, Deodorized Central Mass with Satellites, 1980s?;
enlarge to see all the stuffies

Richard Serra, Equal; among the things we really like at the Guggenheim
Bilbao are the massive Richard Serra iron sculptures; here is a much
smaller installation...OK to touch them...

Lastly: art or not art? I say it is art; therefore it is; QED

Midtown by night; definitely art


Museum Of Modern Art, 1

Our next stop, October 4th, was the Museum of Modern Art, located in mid-town Manhattan, and said to be the US' 4th most-visited art museum. Historically associated with the Rockefellers, it is decidedly European in orientation, although there is plenty of later American and other work in the collection. The gift shoppe and design store were about the largest we have seen. We did not dare enter. Although we very much enjoyed this museum and its collection, the lack of interpretive tours was a disappointment.


Its signature piece, evidently, is Van Gogh's Starry Night, 1889


One of a series, as we know--a trick Van Gogh learned from Monet--
personally I prefer the Cafe Terrace at Night, 1888, at the Kroller-Muller
in the Netherlands

Gaugin, Still Life with Three Puppies, 1888; as anyone
knows, puppies are anything but still...

Serat, Evening, Honfleur, 1888



Picasso, Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, 1908; the first of
many, many Picasos at the MoMA; among his break-out
works...

Among the MoMA's treats are the big windows from
which you can look out upon the neighborhood

Picasso, Girl with a Mandolin, 1910

Diego Rivera, Cubist Landscape, 1912; before he was Rivera

Klimt, The Park, 1910

Van Gogh, Portrait of Joseph Roulin, 1889; going postal



















































































































































































Obligatory water lilies room
Man Ray, Indestructible Object..., 1964 replica by the artist of
the original 1923...um...thing

Another beauty out the window

Marcel Duchamp, In Advance of the Broken Arm...,
1915-1964; it's a long story, the gist of which is that 
calling something a work of art is sufficient for its being 
a work of art...

Frida Kahlo, Self-Portrait with Cropped Hair, 1940

A 2nd signature work, I guess, Dali's Persistence of Memory, 1931

I'd never seen it before in person, although one sees copies, 
references, representations of it everywhere; never realized how 
tiny it is (9.5x13"); high point of the visit, for me...the topic of
my Ph.D. dissertation was, to the best of my recollection, memory

Among my favorites, Dali did sculpture as well as everything else;
here, Retrospective Bust of a Woman, 1933.., some crumbs reconstructed
in 1970...pregnant with meaning...click to enlarge to see the ants on
her forehead

Tina Modotti, Telephone Wires in Mexico, 1935; somehow
spoke to me...

Frank Loyd Wright's model for the proposed urban/suburban
city of Broadacre; thinking big...




Saturday, November 2, 2024

Staten Island Cruise

So one day, October 3rd, we took the #1 train down to South Ferry and then the Staten Island Ferry to Staten Island, partly for the views, partly to check out Staten Island itself, but mostly for the views. It was an extraordinary once-in-a-lifetime trip.


The older Whitehall ferry terminal...art nouveau?

Brooklyn Bridge; or possibly some other bridge

Rearview view

Fort Williams, Governor's Island





Sister ship


Actually, Staten Island is a lot further away than, say, New Jersey

The way to the open sea

The stevedore/longshoremen/whatever strike had just ended, so this
behemoth is probably raising steam to head in to the dock

Cleared for landing, on approach

Manhattan, so far away

Neoclassical architecture on Staten Island

French cuisine

Unfinished business

On the return to Manhattan, a view of the Brooklyn Tower